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AIBU?

Share your dilemmas and get honest opinions from other Mumsnetters.

Should I be proud or angry??

381 replies

Seymorbutts · 13/01/2026 16:54

My 14 yo son is a blackbelt in Taekwondo. He worked really hard to get there, has always had a lot of discipline and regularly competes in competitions. It’s been drilled into him by his teacher and myself that the best way to avoid physical conflict is to walk away and Taekwondo also taught him de-escalation techniques and how to avoid getting into fights. It’s a sport for him. He’s never been in a fight other than the odd push or shove in the playground in his life…until the other day. A boy in the year above him has been “hassling” him for months, as he puts it. I’d call it bullying. He’s had racist abuse from this boy (DS is mixed race in a very white school) I’ve spoken to the school about this, nothing ever seems to change. The boy’s deliberately tripped him up a number of times, causing him to fall, taunts him, steals & hides his schoolbag, and has shoved him more than once. From what I know DS gives back as good as he gets verbally but has never retaliated physically. The other day however, this boy shoved him hard (not just according to DS, multiple witnesses also) against his locker and called him a horrible racial slur and DS finally cracked. He floored him with a kick to the head! The boy wasn’t knocked out or anything and according to DS he didn’t kick with full force but it did knock him to the ground. There was no real damage done, it wasn’t severe enough for him to go to hospital or even go home from school (the school didn’t find out about the incident till much later in the day). I’m in conversation with the school about it now and DS is temporarily suspended pending a final outcome but the other boy hasn’t been suspended. AIBU to be backing my son here? The other boy started it - he got physical first, my son was defending himself, he’s been bullied by this boy for months (who is far bigger and stronger than DS) including being racially abused and the school did nothing about it. IMO this boy had it coming. DS also used a controlled kick, deliberately designed not to do severe damage. I’d never usually defend my son using violence, other than in self-defence, especially because of how highly trained he is, but in this situation I feel it was warranted. As a black woman, if someone called me what that boy called my son (especially if they also shoved me like he did) I can’t say they wouldn’t get a flying kick to the head either! For that reason alone I can’t condemn him for doing what he did. I do feel uncomfortable with condoning violence but I also feel proud my boy stood up for himself AND managed to have the discipline in the heat of the moment not to hurt him more severely (which he definitely could of done). And part of me feels like saying to the school, well if you let racism go unchecked what did you think was going to happen?! Needless to say the boy won’t be bothering him again and he’s now a bit of a hero around school!

OP posts:
BringBackCatsEyes · 16/01/2026 16:51

Those people who think he shouldn't use his training to defend himself, what do you think the training is for?
Let me just go do a black belt so I can be told I'm too dangerous to defend myself against violent Racists? I find myself wondering why some of you would want to protect a vicious Racist. Maybe it feels like an infringement of your percieved rights?? SMH.

I think the defence should be in proportion to the threat. If OP's son felt his life was in danger then sure kick the perp in the head.
If OP's son had killed or severely physically hurt the bully (which a kick to the had can do) I'm pretty sure the a court would decide that OP's defence was not in proportion.

I am not condoning the bully's actions nor the appalling way the bullying has been dealt with by the school.

I'm pretty sure students of martial arts are told to be careful when defending themselves.

pimplebum · 16/01/2026 19:39

It’s for sport and life or death situations not for a corridor dust up

ellyeth · 16/01/2026 22:57

From what the OP has said, this was not "a corridor dust up", it was a continuation of a campaign of bullying and intimidation from the other boy and it should have been dealt with properly by the school. Don't minimise the anxiety and distress overt racism causes to a victim by referring to just one of many reported incidents and describing it in such a flippant manner.

There should have already been a thorough investigation by the school and I feel the school has neglected their duty of care. Is it reasonable to expect the OP's son to continue putting up with this disgusting behaviour without ever retaliating? Of course violence should not be encouraged or praised, but everyone has a breaking point. And why is the other boy not suspended, pending further investigation , given the history of intimidation that the school was already aware of (and there were reportedly several witnesses)?

Zerosleep · 21/01/2026 07:07

I don’t blame your son at all. I would be leaning heavily into the fact your son defended himself. It’s absolutely disgusting that he has had to put up with racism and bullying. I would be more focused on what the school are doing to eradicate this behaviour. Don't let them bully you into thinking for one minute your son doesn’t have the right to defend himself in a situation where he feared for his safety due to the racial bullying. I wouldn’t let this go until the other boy received sanctions. I say this as a white mom with a dual heritage child, I would be handling it as above as the racism is not ok, I would shame the school.

123becauseicouldntthinkofone · 22/01/2026 14:54

i would be more worried about this getting back to his dojo as he could lose his license for using it in school. it would be different a punch but a kick to the head is way over the line and he wasnt in control of how hard or he wouldnt have done this in the first place. i absolutely agree he needed to retaliate but you need to be having words about using legs and speak to his sensei about other less forceful retaliations.

AmIEnough · 23/01/2026 09:58

I’m absolutely with your son on this! He’s been pushed to the limit the other boy had it coming. You should be proud of him for showing as much restraint as he has. I hope the School sees it this way too.

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